La. Maginniss et Wk. Milsom, EFFECTS OF HIBERNATION ON BLOOD-OXYGEN TRANSPORT IN THE GOLDEN-MANTLED GROUND-SQUIRREL, Respiration physiology, 95(2), 1994, pp. 195-208
Isocapnic O-2 equilibrium curves (O(2)EC) were generated for winter hi
bernating and summer active ground squirrels (Spermophilus lateralis)
at 7 degrees and 37 degrees C using thin blood film techniques. Half-s
aturation P-O2 at 7 degrees C and pHa 7.46 were 5.8 +/- 0.1 and 6.9 +/
- 0.2 Torr for hibernating and summer squirrels, respectively; P-50 va
lues at 37 degrees C and pHa 7.49 were 15.3 +/- 0.1 and 18.1 +/- 0.5 T
orr, respectively. This increased blood O-2 affinity in the winter ani
mal results, in part, from reductions of RBC organic phosphates. The m
olar ratio ([ATP] + [DPG])/[Hb(4)] decreased from 1.55 in summer squir
rels to 0.91 in winter hibernators. O(2)EC shape and CO2 Bohr effect w
ere similar for the two animal groups, but varied with blood temperatu
re. At 7 degrees C, Hill plots were nonlinear; Hill's n increased from
values of 2.2-2.4 below 40% S to 2.7-2.9 above 60% S. At 37 degrees C
, Hill plots were reasonably linear (n = 2.5). CO2 Bohr slopes (Delta
log P-50/Delta pH) for hibernating and euthermic squirrels were -0.37
+/- 0.02 and -0.40 +/- 0.03 at 7 degrees C, respectively, and -0.62 +/
- 0.04 and -0.60 +/- 0.02 at 37 degrees C, respectively. Blood O-2 cap
acity was significantly greater (P < 0.001) in the hibernator; hematoc
rit (55%) and [Hb] (19.1 g/dl) exceeded the summer squirrel values by
20% and 25%, respectively. Estimated P<(V)over bar >(O2) values for su
mmer and winter animals at 7 degrees C and pH 7.46 were 7.25 and 6.94
Torr, respectively. This suggests that the effect of increased Hb-O-2
affinity on P (V) over bar(O2) is offset by increased circulating [Hb]
. We conclude that seasonal changes in the O-2 transport properties of
squirrel blood do not contribute to the depression of aerobic metabol
ism during winter hibernation.